Mike Chambers

code = joy

Archive for March, 2010

FlashCamp San Francisco : April 16th : Flash Player 10.1, Flash CS5, Flash Mobile

with 4 comments

I have just posted information about FlashCamp San Francisco, a free developer / designers event that we will be holding in the Adobe San Francisco Office on Friday night, April 16th. This will be similar to the other world wide FlashCamps going on this spring, with this event focusing on Flash Player 10.1, Flash CS5, Flash Builder and Flash mobile development.

Register for FlashCamp San Francisco

From the event page:

FlashCamp San Francisco is a free one night event hosted by Adobe covering everything you need to know about about the latest Flash Platform tools and technologies, including Adobe Flash Player 10.1, Adobe Flash CS5, Adobe Flash Builder 4 and mobile design and development.

Read the rest of this entry »

Written by mikechambers

March 10th, 2010 at 9:54 am

Posted in General

Tagged with

Flash Player 10.1 and Windows Phone 7

with 42 comments

There has been a lot of buzz in the mobile space lately, and I suspect there will be even more around Windows Phone 7 at next week’s Microsoft Mix conference. One thing I wanted to clarify as it may have been lost in some of the other news is that Adobe and Microsoft are working together to bring Flash Player 10.1 to Internet Explorer Mobile on Windows Phone 7 Series.

I dont have an eta or other specifics right now, but it is something that both Adobe and Microsoft are working closely together on.

Written by mikechambers

March 9th, 2010 at 4:26 pm

Posted in General

Tagged with , ,

Relative Performance of Rich Media Content across Browsers and Operating Systems

with 52 comments

Two of the things that Flash is often criticized for is that it:

  1. Uses too much CPU
  2. Performs significantly worse on the Mac than on Windows

This got me thinking about whether some quick tests would bear this out, and if so, whether it was isolated to just Flash content.

Below are some raw numbers showing CPU usage of various rich content across different browsers and operating systems. This includes video deployed via HTML 5, JavaScript / Canvas animations, Flash Video, and Flash animations. This is by no means a scientific study, but I do think the results show that:
Read the rest of this entry »

Written by mikechambers

March 1st, 2010 at 11:57 am

Posted in General